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Bullies 2 Buddies Newsletter )
 by Izzy Kalman, MS......Empowering Victims the World Over March 2004 
in this issue
  • Jealousy and Self-Deception
  • "The Passion" and Violence in Entertainment
  • A Difference between Conservatives and Liberals
  • Read Previous Newsletters
  • Movie Recommendation: Woody Allen's "Anything Else"
  • Marriage and Personality Disorders
  • Biologically Programmed Behaviors

  • Finally spring is upon us. I hope you are enjoying it as much as I am.

    March is almost over, but I have managed to complete this newsletter before it's gone, so I can still call it the March newsletter.

    Jealousy and Self-Deception

    Jealousy has long been recognized as a source of human misery and destruction. It is no accident that it holds a place of honor in the Ten Commandments. All major religions consider jealousy to be a grave sin. Few of us are free of jealousy, and that is because it has a strong biological basis. The drive for power and success is inherent in all living things. When we see others being more successful than we are or having things we don't, it is natural to feel jealous. The irony is that, as I will shortly be explaining, when we are jealous of others, it is really ourselves that we are resenting.

    We can suffer from jealousy without even being aware of it. Lola, my college age daughter, often brings her friends over for dinner, giving me the opportunity to pick the brains of the bright stars of the college-age generation (much to Lola's consternation).

    One of her friends expressed his contempt for kids who are born to families with great wealth (for example, George W. Bush) because they have a huge, unfair advantage over people like himself. It is much easier for the offspring of the wealthy to reach positions of political power than for someone born into meager means. (It IS possible, as Bill Clinton proved, but it is harder).

    I asked Lola's friend, if he were given a choice, would he prefer to have been born into great wealth? He said "Of course!" I pointed out to him that but a few moments ago he expressed his contempt for those born into wealth. Thus, he hates the person he would like to be!

    Yes, when we are jealous, we hate the person we would like to be! What foolishness! We would be better off being happy for those who have what we wish for, and hoping that maybe one day we, too, will be as fortunate as they are.

    "The Passion" and Violence in Entertainment
    Mel Gibson is a genius, having produced what may become the biggest blockbuster movie of all time. What I don't understand, though, is how, being a devout Christian, he can produce such a film. He isn't stupid. Perhaps he doesn't read the professional psychological journals, but anyone who reads newspapers and watches news on television knows that violence in entertainment desensitizes people to real-life violence. Why would Mel Gibson make a film that will desensitize viewers to Jesus' pain? And if we become desensitized to the pain of Jesus, won't we also become desensitized to the pain of ordinary mortals?

    I also don't understand the excitement of the country's Christian leaders, either. Why are they encouraging their flocks to see a film that will desensitize them to the pain of their Lord?

    Because they AREN'T stupid. Violence in entertainment has always been used to SENSITIZE people to life problems. Virtually all literature, including the Greek tragedies and the Bible, is full of violence. Entertainment is one of the most powerful teaching tools, giving us windows into aspects of life that we otherwise may miss. In modern times, entertainment has served to raise people's awareness to the plight of Blacks, Jews, Latinos, Irish, women, Gays and Lesbians, the learning disabled and people with various other handicaps, and virtually every minority you can think of, including endangered animal species. It has raised sensitivity to child abuse, drug abuse, and a host of other social problems. I would bet that entertainment, more than any other force in modern life, has sensitized people to human suffering.

    The only people that have seemed to miss the purpose of violence in entertainment are those researchers who are invested in proving that violent entertainment causes violence in real life.

    A Difference between Conservatives and Liberals
    In my seminars on Anger Control, I explain how agriculture unleashed the explosion in human population by freeing us from the food limitations we experienced as hunter/gatherers. Since the Earth cannot sustain unlimited human population growth, wars, epidemics, contraception and abortion are some of the ways in which our population is controlled.

    A major difference between conservatives and liberals lies in their respective attitudes towards abortion and warfare. Liberals tend to be in favor of abortion and against warfare, while conservatives tend to be against abortion but more quick to endorse warfare.

    Both abortion and warfare are forms of killing. One or the other is needed for limiting the population explosion. The difference is that conservatives are more inclined to have people die once they have reached adulthood, while liberals want to have people die before they have left the womb. Which is better? That's a tough philosophical question, and I don't know the answer. All I do know is that both conservatives and liberals promote some form of death.

    Read Previous Newsletters
    My mailing list grows from month to month, and many of you may not have seen my previous newsletters. If you like this one, you will probably like my old ones, too. The ideas tend to be different from those you are used to hearing, so I invite you to read them. I am providing here a link to the webpage that gives you access to my newsletters. As always, I invite you to reprint them and distribute them as you see fit. Just kindly give me credit as author.

    Read Izzy's previous newsletters. »

    Movie Recommendation: Woody Allen's "Anything Else"
    I have often said that the best psychologists are comedians. They see our weaknesses and show us what we are really like. Of all the comedians, none has a more insightful grasp into human psychology than Woody Allen.

    A few months ago, I wrote about neuroses and personality disorders. Personality disorders have traditionally been considered more pathological than neuroses, a step closer to psychosis. What has perplexed the experts, though, is the fact that people with personality disorders do not decompensate to psychosis any more frequently than neurotics do. My opinion is that they are really two sides to the same coin, with the difference being that neurotics tend to blame themselves while the personality disordered blame others. Since blaming does not solve problems, both are limited in their ability to deal with life.

    Woody Allen's latest film, Anything Else, available on DVD, does a magnificent job of demonstrating the complimentary nature of neurosis and personality disorders. The movie is an interesting twist on his typical neurotic love-affair stories. Woody Allen befriends a young Jewish man, Jerry (Jason Biggs), who is a psychological replica of his younger self. Jerry is hopelessly in love with a personality disordered young woman, Amanda (Christina Ricci), who takes terrible advantage of him. Woody Allen gets to advise the younger neurotic with the benefit of the wisdom that comes with age and experience.

    Perhaps the main message of the film is that he neurotic and the personality disordered are the pot and lid that go together, one being no more healthy than the other. The personality disordered is the manipulator and the neurotic is the sucker. You can't have one without the other.

    Marriage and Personality Disorders
    I have often been struck by the observation that mental health professionals get divorced at least as often as the general population. When I talk to them about their ex-spouses, they inevitably describe their exes as personality disordered. Mental health professionals are supposed to be adept at quickly diagnosing problems. Yet we can date someone for months and even years and not realize that they're personality disordered until after the wedding!

    Biologically Programmed Behaviors
    Sometimes seminar participants criticize me for supposedly contradicting myself. I am grateful for such criticisms because they make me think and sharpen my views.

    On a few occasions, I have been told that I claim that anger is a genetically programmed behavior, yet I tell people they can stop themselves from getting angry. They tell me that just like you can't control hunger and the need to urinate, if anger is a genetically programmed behavior, how can I tell people it can be controlled?

    What is the answer to this dilemma? Eating, urinating, and anger are biologically programmed behaviors, but the first two are NEEDS, while the latter is a RESPONSE. You can't live without eating and urinating, so we cannot make these needs go away without dying. However, anger is a response - a response to danger (pain or the fear of pain). If there is no danger, then anger doesn't get triggered. Biologically we are best off if we have a life without danger. And in civilization we don't experience as much danger as when we were living in nature.

    What I teach is that the things that trigger our anger in civilization are not true dangers. When you realize that the people who have been triggering your anger are not real enemies looking to injure you or kill you, then it is a simple matter not to respond with anger.

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